Automatic method to delineate or categorize an electrocardiogram

ABSTRACT

Disclosed is a method for computerizing delineation and/or multi-label classification of an ECG signal, including: applying a neural network to the ECG, labelling the ECG, and optionally displaying the labels according to time with the ECG signal.

FIELD OF INVENTION

The present invention relates to temporal signal analysis, preferably cardiac signal analysis, more preferably electrocardiogram analysis, using at least one neural network.

BACKGROUND OF INVENTION

Electrocardiogram (ECG) and endocardiogram are graphic representations of the electrical activity of the heart. Electrocardiogram is recorded from the body using a number of electrodes placed in specific predefined areas. It is considered as a fundamental tool of clinical practice. It is a simple, non-invasive exam that can be performed by any health professional. Placing the electrodes is not considered as a medical procedure, yet in some countries, the prescription of the ECG by a doctor is essential for it to be performed. It is known that the ECG constitutes the first step in cardiovascular diseases (CVD) diagnosis, and is used multiple times throughout the life of a CVD patient. CVD constitute the first global cause of death.

A cardiac signal is composed of one or multiple synchronized temporal signals, called lead signals. The ECG shown in FIG. 1 represents a standard 12-lead resting ECG, with its 12 standard deviations recording during 10 seconds. Some ECG, specifically known as Holters, may record only one lead for a period of time which can be of more than 7 days.

A cardiac signal displays repeating patterns usually comprising a P-wave, a QRS complex and a T-wave, respectively corresponding to the depolarization of the atria, depolarization of the ventricles and repolarization of the ventricles. These waves and complexes are shown in FIG. 2, which focuses on a couple of beats in one lead signal.

Cardiac signals allow for the detection of many abnormalities, which often in turn point to specific CVD. It is estimated that about 150 measurable abnormalities can be identified on an ECG recordings today. However, without specific expertise and/or regular training, only a small portion of these abnormalities can be easily spotted.

Unfortunately, today, it is estimated that only one third of ECGs are performed in settings where cardiology expertise is readily available.

In order to make cardiac signal interpretation, especially ECG interpretation simpler and assist non-specialists, two alternatives exist today, but neither fully satisfy the needs of health professionals:

-   -   Telecardiology centers, where an interpretation of an ECG sent         by a non-specialist is delivered either by a cardiologist or by         a specialized ECG technician. Their interpretations are of high         quality but are slow and expensive to obtain.     -   Prior art automated cardiac signal interpretation softwares,         which are mainly developed by cardiac signal device         manufacturers. They provide low quality interpretation (false         alarms are very frequent) but deliver them in seconds.

Prior art automated cardiac signal interpretation softwares can provide two types of information about a cardiac signal:

-   -   a local information called delineation, providing the temporal         location of each wave and optionally qualifying each wave         separately; and/or     -   a global information providing a classification of the cardiac         signal as normal/abnormal or labeling its abnormalities.

Concerning delineation, two main approaches are used for finding the waves of cardiac signals.

The first one is based on multiscale wavelet analysis. This approach looks for wavelet coefficients reaching predefined thresholds at well-chosen scales (Martinez et al, IEEE transactions on biomedical engineering, Vol. 51, No. 4, April 2004, 570-581, Almeida et al., IEEE transactions on biomedical engineering, Vol. 56. No. 8, August 2009, pp 1996-2005. Boichat et al., Proceedings of Wearable and Implantable Body Sensor Networks, 2009, pp 256-261, U.S. Pat. No. 8,903,479, 2014-12-02, Zoicas et al.). The usual process is to look for QRS complexes, and then look for P waves on the signal before the complexes, and after them for T waves. This approach can only handle a single lead at a time, sometimes using projection to one artificial lead (US 2014/0148714-2014-05-29, Mamaghanian et al.). This computation is made very unstable by the use of thresholds. The approach is also limited as it can neither deal with multiple P waves nor with “hidden” P waves.

The second one is based on Hidden Markov Models (HMM). This machine learning approach considers that the current state of the signal (whether a sample is either part of a QRS complex, a P wave, a T wave or no wave) is a hidden variable that one wants to recover (Coast et al., IEEE transactions on biomedical engineering, Vol. 37, No. 9, September 1990, pp 826-836, Hughes et al., Proceedings of Neural Information Processing Systems, 2004, pp 611-618, U.S. Pat. No. 8,332,017, 2012-12-11. Trassenko et al.).

To this end, a representation of the signal must be designed using handcrafted “features”, and a mathematical model must be fitted for each wave, based on these features. Based on a sufficient number of examples, the algorithms can learn to recognize each wave. This process can however be cumbersome since the feature design is not straightforward, and the model, usually Gaussian, is not well adapted. Also, none of these works has considered the situation of hidden P waves.

In the state-of-the-art, characterization of the waves for the delineation is only performed on the QRS to detect for instance ventricular or paced beats, and done in a second step, once the waves have already been localized. Such methods usually use standard classification algorithms which learn the type of beat based on many training examples of handcrafted set of features and corresponding beat label (Chazal et al., IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 2004, vol. 51, pp. 1196-1206). These methods are limited in that the features which have been handcrafted will always be suboptimal since they were not learnt and may have erased some crucial information.

In order to solve the above issues, the latest works (Kiranyaz et al, IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 2016, Vol. 63, pp 664-675) have turned to novel architectures called neural networks which have been intensively studied and had great results in the field of imaging (Russakovsky et al., arXiv:1409.0575v3, 30 Jan. 2015). Indeed, these methods bypass the need of handcrafted features and directly learn from raw or mildly preprocessed data. Still, these applications of neural networks to cardiac signal waves characterization are very limited since:

-   -   they must first rely on an algorithm able to detect the waves;     -   they were only developed for QRS characterization; and     -   they lack context information in processing one beat at a time,         surrounding beats often providing important information.

Concerning abnormalities and/or CVD detection, most algorithms use rules based on temporal and morphological indicators computed using the delineation: PR, RR and QT intervals, QRS width, level of the ST segment, slope of the T wave, etc. . . . . These rules such as the Minnesota Code (Prineas et al., Springer, ISBN 978-1-84882-777-6, 2009) were written by cardiologists. However, they do not reflect the way the cardiologists analyze the ECGs and are crude simplifications. Algorithms such as the Glasgow University Algorithm are based on such principles (Statement of Validation and Accuracy for the Glasgow 12-Lead ECG Analysis Program. Physio Control. 2009).

More advanced methods use learning algorithms, and are built using a diagnosis and an adequate representation for each cardiac signal they learn from. In, Shen et al., Biomedical Engineering and Informatics (BMEI), 2010, vol. 3, pp. 960-964 for instance, the author used support vector machines to detect bundle branch blocks. However, in these methods, once again, it is necessary to seek a representation of the raw data into a space that preserves the invariance and stability properties. Indeed, cardiac signals vary significantly from one patient to another. It is therefore extremely difficult for an algorithm to learn how to discriminate different diseases by simply comparing raw data. A representation which drastically limits this interpatient variability while preserving the invariance within the same disease class must be chosen. Also, once again these representations usually rely on a preliminary detection of the beats and hence in a reliable delineation.

Some scientific teams very recently also turned to neural network architectures, but limitations still arose when they attempted to apply them to ECGs.

One team (Jin and Dong, Science China Press, Vol. 45. No 3, 2015, pp 398-416; CN104970789) proposed binary classification on a full FCC, hence providing one and only one class for any analyzed ECG. This is for instance a classification normal Vs abnormal (see [0027] of CN104970789). Their architecture use convolutional layers which process the leads independently before mixing them into fully connected layers.

The authors also mention multi-class analysis, aiming at recovering one class among several, but they do not consider the less commonly used multi-label classification, which is however crucial in ECG analysis since one ECG can have several abnormalities such as for instance a left bundle branch block with atrial fibrillations.

Thus, there is a need for methods able to analyze cardiac signal, especially ECG, that can:

-   -   carry out the analysis without the need for beat-by-beat         processing, or feature extraction;     -   obtain the delineation of the signal, including identification         of hidden P waves, qualification of each wave in a single step,         and optionally present this information in an comprehensible         way;     -   provide a multi-label classification directly from at least one         time window of a cardiac signal, generally exhibiting multiple         labels, contrary the prior art, which provides a single         exclusive label;     -   process data with varying number of leads with a same neural         network;     -   be fast, stable and reliable.

SUMMARY

To address the above issues in cardiac signal analyses, the Applicant developed two techniques based on convolutional neural networks:

-   -   A convolutional neural network which first gives a dense         prediction of the probability of presence of each wave on each         time stamp of the cardiac signal, then post-processes the signal         to produce its delineation. This novel approach of the         delineation, using convolutional networks, allows the processing         of cardiac signals of any duration, analyzing and qualifying all         types of waves in the same way in a single step, without being         constrained by their positions.     -   A convolutional neural network which directly predicts multiple         labels on the cardiac signal. It results in a fixed format         multi-label output which can represent abnormalities such as for         instance “Atrial fibrillations” or descriptors such as for         instance “Normal sinus rhythm” or “Noisy ECG”.

Thus, the present invention relates to a method for computerizing the delineation of a cardiac signal comprising a plurality of time points, said method comprising: applying a convolutional neural network NN1 to said cardiac signal, whereby the convolutional neural network NN1 reads each time point of the cardiac signal, analyzes temporally each time point of the cardiac signal, assigns to each time point of the cardiac signal a score for at least one wave among the following waves: P-wave, QRS complex, T-wave.

According to one embodiment, the convolutional neural network NN1 assigns to each time point of the cardiac signal a score for at least the following waves: P-wave, QRS complex, T-wave. According to one embodiment, the convolutional neural network assigns to each time point of the cardiac signal a score for the hidden P waves.

According to one embodiment, the convolutional neural network NN1 is a fully convolutional neural network.

According to an embodiment, the method further comprises a pre-treatment step, wherein the pre-treatment comprises denoising and removing the baseline of the cardiac signal as well as expressing it at a chosen frequency prior to the application of NN1.

According to an embodiment, the method further comprises a post-treatment step computing the time points of the beginning and the end of each wave in the cardiac signal, called the onset and the offset, and other information such as for instance prematurity, conduction and origin of the waves. According to one embodiment, the method further comprises a post-treatment step computing global or local measurements based on the onset and the offset of each wave and the signal, such as for instance PR interval, ST elevation and heart rate. According to one embodiment, the method further comprises a post-treatment step computing delineation-based labels based on the global or local measurements.

According to one embodiment, the convolutional neural network NN1 is able to process a cardiac signal recorded from any number of leads.

The invention also comprises a software comprising a trained neural network for delineation of a cardiac signal. The invention also comprises a computer device comprising a software implementing a method for delineation of a cardiac signal, comprising applying a convolutional neural network NN1 to said cardiac signal, as described above. According to one embodiment, the computer device further comprises a display configured for displaying the wave locations and optionally simultaneously the cardiac signal and/or an application programming interface for recovering the delineation-based labels and/or delineation for any given cardiac signal.

This invention also includes a method for computerizing multi-label classification of a cardiac signal having a plurality of time points, comprising applying a convolutional neural network NN2 to said cardiac signal, whereby the convolutional neural network NN2 reads each time point of the cardiac signal, analyzes each time point of the cardiac signal, computes scores on a time window aggregating at least two time points for a plurality of predetermined non-exclusive labels, such as for instance normal cardiac signal, artefact or atrial fibrillation, and allots to the time window the labels which have a score higher than at least one predetermined threshold.

According to one embodiment, the convolutional neural network NN2 is a recurrent neural network.

According to an embodiment, the method further comprises a pre-treatment step, wherein the pre-treatment comprises denoising and removing the baseline of the cardiac signal as well as expressing it at a chosen frequency prior to the application of NN2.

According to an embodiment, the method further comprises a post-treatment step, comprising a filtering step so as to remove redundant labels, and optionally incorporating delineation-derived labels such as for instance first degree atrioventricular block (long PR interval), and optionally computing the onset and offset times of each abnormality. According to one embodiment, the convolutional neural network NN2 is able to process a cardiac signal recorded from any number of leads.

The invention also comprises a software comprising a trained neural network for multi-label classification of a cardiac signal. The invention also comprises a computer device comprising a software implementing a method for multi-label classification of a cardiac signal, comprising applying a recurrent neural network NN2 to said cardiac signal, as described above. According to one embodiment, the computer device further comprises a display configured for displaying the scores of the labels which have been allotted to a time window and optionally simultaneously the cardiac signal; and/or an application programming interface for recovering the labels.

Furthermore, the invention also concerns a method for computerizing multi-label classification of a cardiac signal, having a plurality of time points, said method comprising applying a convolutional neural network NN1 to said cardiac signal, wherein the neural network: reads each time point of the cardiac signal, analyzes temporally each time point of the cardiac signal, assigns to each time point of the cardiac signal a score for at least the following waves: P-wave, QRS complex, T-wave; computes the onset and the offset of each wave in the cardiac signal based on the scores assigned to each time point; computes global measurements based on the onset and the offset of each wave; and applying a convolutional neural network NN2 to said cardiac signal, wherein the neural network: reads each time point of the cardiac signal and the global measurements obtained from NN1, analyzes each time point of the cardiac signal and the global measurements obtained from NN, computes scores on a time window aggregating at least two time points for a plurality of predetermined non-exclusive labels, such as for example normal cardiac signal, artefact or, atrial fibrillation, allots to the time window the labels which have a score higher than the predetermined threshold.

According to one embodiment, the method further comprises a pre-treatment step, wherein the pre-treatment comprises denoising and removing the baseline of the cardiac signal as well as expressing it at a chosen frequency prior to the application of NN1 and NN2. According to one embodiment, the method further comprises a post-treatment step computing delineation-based labels, removing redundant labels, and optionally computing onset and offset of each abnormality. According to one embodiment, the convolutional neural networks are able to process a cardiac signal recorded from any number of leads. The invention also comprises a software comprising a trained neural network for delineation of a cardiac signal. The invention also comprises a computer device comprising a software implementing said method, comprising applying convolutional neural networks NN1 and NN2 to said cardiac signal, as described above.

According to one embodiment, the computer device further comprises a display configured for displaying the wave locations, the scores of the labels which have been allotted to a time window and optionally simultaneously the cardiac signal; and/or an application programming interface for recovering the labels and/or delineation for any given cardiac signal.

Furthermore, the invention also includes a method for computerizing delineation and multi-label classification of a cardiac signal having a plurality of time points, comprising applying a trained neural network NN3 to said cardiac signal, whereby the recurrent neural network NN3 reads each time point of the cardiac signal, analyzes temporally each time point of the cardiac signal, assigns to each time point of the cardiac signal a score for at least the following waves: P-wave, QRS complex, T-wave; computes scores on a time window aggregating at least two time points for a plurality of predetermined non-exclusive labels, such as for example normal cardiac signal, artefact or atrial fibrillation; and allots to the time window the labels which have a score higher than at least one predetermined threshold.

According to an embodiment, the method further comprises a pre-treatment step, wherein the pre-treatment comprises denoising and removing the baseline of the cardiac signal as well as expressing it at a chosen frequency prior to the application of NN3.

According to one embodiment, the method further comprises a post-treatment step computing the onset and offset of each wave in the cardiac signal optionally with other information such as for instance prematurity, conduction and origin of the waves; computing delineation-derived labels; removing redundant labels, and optionally producing onset and offset of each abnormality and global and local measurements such as for instance PR interval and heart rate.

The invention also comprises a software comprising a trained neural network for delineation and multi-label classification of a cardiac signal. The invention also comprises a computer device comprising a software implementing a method for delineation and multi-label classification of a cardiac signal, comprising applying a neural network NN3 to said cardiac signal, as described above. According to one embodiment, the computer device further comprising a display configured for displaying the wave locations, the scores of the labels which have been allotted to a time window and optionally simultaneously the cardiac signal; and/or an application programming interface for recovering the labels and/or delineation for any given cardiac signal.

Definition

“Abnormality” refers to any physiological abnormality which can be identifiable on the cardiac signal. Today about 150 measurable abnormalities can be identified on cardiac signal recordings. For instance, within the present invention, the following abnormalities may be nonlimitatively identified: “Sinoatrial block, paralysis or arrest”, “Atrial Fibrillation”, “Atrial fibrillation or flutter”, “Atrial Flutter”, “Atrial tachycardia”, “Junctional tachycardia”, “Supraventricular tachycardia”, “Sinus tachycardia”, “Ventricular tachycardia”, “Pacemaker”, “Premature ventricular complex”, “Premature atrial complex”, “First degree atrio-ventricular block (AVB)”, 2^(nd) degree AVB Mobitz I”, “2^(nd) degree AVB Mobitz Il”, “3^(rd) degree AVB”, “Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome”, “Left bundle branch block”, “Right bundle branch block”, “Intraventricular conduction delay”, “Left ventricular hypertrophy”, “Right ventricular hypertrophy”, “Acute myocardial infarction”, “Old myocardial infarction”, “Ischemia”, “Hyperkalemia”, “Hypokalemia”, “Brugada”, “Long QTc”, etc. . . . .

“Cardiac signal” refers to the signal recording the electrical conduction in the heart. Said cardiac signal may be for instance an electrocardiogram (ECG) or an endocardiogram. Such signals may have one or more channels, called leads. It may be short term (10 seconds in standard ECGs) or long term (several days in Holters).

“Classification” refers to the task of categorizing objects into a list of groups. Such a task includes for instance recognizing the animal from a picture (the list of groups is then a list of animals), or recognizing whether an ECG is normal or abnormal.

“Multi-label classification” refers to identifying objects as being part of none, one or several groups of a given list of groups. Such a task includes for instance identifying none to several animals from a picture, or identifying none to several abnormalities on an ECG.

“Delineation” refers to the identification of the temporal localization of each of the waves of a cardiac signal. Delineation can also optionally provide more precise characterization of each of the waves.

“Descriptor” refers to a description of a cardiac signal which is not an abnormality, such as for instance “Normal ECG”, “Normal sinus rhythm” or “Noisy cardiac signal”, “Electrode inversion”, etc. . . . .

“Hidden P wave” refers to a P wave which occurs during another wave or complex, such as for example during a T wave.

“Label” refers to a class used within the present invention for multi-label classification of a cardiac signal. Said label can be an abnormality or a descriptor. Labels are none exclusive. For instance, one can observe an Atrial fibrillation and Wolff-Parkinson-White together.

“Delineation-based labels” refers to labels which can be deduced (i.e. computed) from the delineation and its measurements. For instance, within the present invention, the following delineation-based labels may be nonlimitatively: “short PR interval” (PR interval <120 ms), “First degree AV block” (PR interval >200 ms), axis deviations, “Long QTc”. “Short QTc”, “Wide complex tachycardia”, intraventricular conduction blocks, etc. . . . .

“Local measurements” refers to measurements directly derived from the delineation, such as for instance a given RR interval (duration between one QRS complex and the following).

“Global measurements” refers to measurements derived from the delineation and aggregated through time, such as for instance a mean or median values of PR interval (duration between the beginning of a conducted P wave and the following QRS complex), P duration, QRS duration, QRS axis, median QT interval, corrected QT interval (Qtc), corrected JT interval, heart rate, ST elevation, Sokolov index, number of premature ventricular complex, number of premature atrial complexes, ratio of non-conducted P waves, ratio of paced waves etc. . . . .

“Neural network” refers to a mathematical structure taking an object as input and producing another object as output though a set of linear and non-linear operations called layers. Such structures have parameters which can be tuned through a learning phase so as to produce a particular output, and are for instance used for classification purposes. The input is then the object to categorize, and the output the probabilities to pertain in each of the categories.

“Convolutional neural network” refers to a neural network which is partly composed of convolutional layers, i.e. layers which apply a convolution on their input.

“Fully convolutional neural network” refers to a convolutional neural network in which all linear operations are convolutions.

“Recurrent convolutional neural network” refers to a particular convolutional neural network structure able to keep a memory on the previous objects it has been applied to.

“Lead invariant structure” refers to a structure proposed by the applicant to be able to use a same neural network for signals with any number of channels. Said structure is preferably used for neural networks processing Holters but not for networks processing standard 12 lead ECGs.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

The present invention relates to temporal signal analysis, preferably cardiac signal analysis, using at least one convolutional neural network.

According to one embodiment, the cardiac signal is recorded from any number of leads during from 1 second to several days.

According to one embodiment, the cardiac signal is recorded from 12 leads or more.

According to an alternative embodiment, the cardiac signal is recorded from strictly less than 12 leads.

According to one embodiment, the cardiac signal is recorded from 12 leads or more under direct medical supervision (resting ECG, stress test, etc.).

According to an alternative embodiment, the cardiac signal is recorded from strictly less than 12 leads or not under direct medical supervision (ambulatory monitoring, etc.).

The framework used here is the one of supervised learning. The aim of supervised learning is to predict an output vector Y from an input vector X. In the Applicant embodiment, X is a cardiac signal (a multivariate signal) as a matrix of size m×n. As for Y, in the Applicant embodiment, it can be:

-   -   the delineation, providing a score for each sample of X to be         part of one of the different waves as a matrix of size p×n;     -   the scores for each label as a vector of size q;     -   the set composed of both the delineation and the vector of         scores.

The problem of supervised learning can also be stated as follows: designing a function f such that for any input X, f(X)≈Y. To this end, the function f is parametrized, and these parameters are “learned” (parameters are optimized with regards to an objective loss function, for example, by means of a gradient descent (Bishop, Pattern Recognition and Machine Learning, Springer, 2006, ISBN-10: 0-387-31073-8).

A neural network is a particular type of function f, aiming at mimicking the way biological neurons work. One of the most basic and earliest neural network is the perceptron (Rosenblatt, Psychological Review, Vol. 65, No. 6, 1958, pp 386-408). From the input X, it computes linear combinations (i.e. weighted sums) of the elements of X through a multiplication with a matrix W, adds an offset b, and then applies a non-linear function σ, such as for instance a sigmoid, on every element of the output:

f(X)=σ(WX+B)

The parameters which are learned in a perceptron are both W and B. In practice, more general neural networks are just compositions of perceptrons:

f(X)=σ_(n)(W _(n) . . . σ_(n)(W ₁ X+B ₁)+B _(n))

The output of a perceptron can be sent as input to another one. The input, the final output, and the intermediate states are called layers. The intermediate ones are more specifically called hidden layers, since only the input and the final output are observed. For instance, a neural network with one hidden layer can be written as:

f(X)=σ₂(W ₂σ₁(W ₁ X+B ₁)+B ₂)

Such a network is shown in a graphic form as an example in FIG. 3. The vector X enters the network as the input layer, each element of the hidden layer is then computed from linear combinations of all elements of X (hence all the links), and the element of the output layer are then computed from linear combinations of all elements of the hidden layer.

It has been shown that neural networks in their general form are able to approximate all kinds of functions (Cybenko, Math. Control Signals Systems, Vol. 2, 1989, pp 303-314). The term “deep learning” is used when a neural network is composed of many layers (though the threshold is not perfectly defined, it can be set to about ten). This field arose mostly in the last decade, thanks to recent advances in algorithms and in computation power.

Convolutional neural networks are a particular type of neural networks, where one or more of the matrices W; which are learned do not encode a full linear combination of the input elements, but the same local linear combination at all the elements of a structured signal such as for example an image or, in this specific context, a cardiac signal, through a convolution (Fukushima, Biol. Cybernetics, Vol. 36, 1980, pp 193-202, LeCun et al., Neural Computation, Vol. 1, 1989, pp 541-551). An illustration of a convolutional neural network is shown in FIG. 6. Most convolutional neural networks implement a few convolutional layers and then standard layers so as to provide a classification. A network which only contains convolutional networks is called a fully convolutional neural network. Finally, a recurrent convolutional neural network is a network composed of two sub-networks: a convolutional neural network which extracts features and is computed at all time points of the cardiac signal, and a neural network on top of it which accumulates through time the outputs of the convolutional neural network in order to provide a refined output. An illustration of a recurrent convolutional neural network is provided in FIG. 7.

As mentioned above, a cardiac signal, especially an ECG is represented as a matrix of real numbers, of size m×n. The constant m is the number of leads, typically 12, though networks can be taught to process cardiac signal with any number of leads, as detailed herebelow. The number of samples n provides the duration of the cardiac signal n/f, with f being the sampling frequency of the cardiac signal. A network is trained for a given frequency, such as for example 250 Hz or 500 Hz or 1000 Hz, though any frequency could be used. A same network can however process cardiac signal of any length n, if it is fully convolutional or a recurrent neural network.

In both the delineation and the multi-label classification embodiments, networks are expressed using open softwares such as for example Tensorflow, Theano, Caffe or Torch. These tools provide functions for computing the output(s) of the networks and for updating their parameters through gradient descent. The exact structure of the network is not extremely important. Preferred choices are fully convolutional networks in the situation of the delineation network (Long et al., Proceedings of Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, 2015, pp 3431-3440), convolutional (Krizhevsk et al., Proceedings of Neural Information Processing Systems, 2012, pp 1097-1105) in the situation of the multi-label classification network, or recurrent neural networks (Donahue et al., arXiv:1411.4389v3, 17 Feb. 2015 and Mnih et al., arXiv:1406.6247v1, 24 Jun. 2014) for both the multi-label classification network and the delineation network. The 2D convolutional layers which were used on images are then easily converted into 1D convolutional layers in order to process cardiac signals.

In one embodiment, the network is amended to process data with varying number of leads in entry. In one embodiment, the neural network further comprises a sequence of layers at the beginning of the network so as to obtain a network which is independent of the number of input leads and can therefore process cardiac signals with any number of leads m. Such a structure is presented in FIG. 8 with m=2 input leads and k=3 output signals. The same structure can process any number of input leads m and will still provide k=3 signals in output, which can be fed to the rest of the network for which a fixed number of input signals is required. In this way, m need not be fixed anymore.

According to one embodiment, in order to obtain a k-lead signal from an m-lead cardiac signal, the m leads are convoluted using a lead-by-lead convolution with k filters, the signal are then grouped by convolution filter in order to obtain k groups of m leads and a mathematical function is finally apply to each group to obtain k leads. According to one embodiment, any number of outputs k can be chosen. According to one embodiment, any number of inputs m can be used. According to one embodiment, the mathematical function is the maximum at each time point or may be any other function known to one skilled in the art. According to the Applicant, this feature was never disclosed before.

This invention also pertains to a method for manufacturing a neural network for delineation of a cardiac signal, by training it.

The training phase of the neural networks in the embodiment of delineation consists in the following steps:

-   -   taking one cardiac signal from a dataset containing cardiac         signals and their known delineation; the cardiac signal being         expressed as a matrix of size m×n with m fixed and at a         predefined frequency;     -   expressing the delineation of this cardiac signal under the form         of a matrix y of size p×n where p is the number of annotated         types of wave; typically p=3, so as to identify P waves. QRS         complexes, and T waves; annotations are expressed as lists of         wave with their start and end points such as for example: (P,         1.2 s, 1.3 s), (QRS 1.4 s, 1.7 s), (T, 1.7, 2.1), (P, 2.2, 2.3);         in this example, the first row of y, corresponding to P waves,         will be 1 for samples corresponding to times between 1.2 and 1.3         s, and between 2.2 and 2.4 s, and 0 otherwise; row 2 will         correspond to QRS complexes and row 3 to T waves;     -   computing the output of the network for this cardiac signal;     -   modifying the parameters of the network so as to decrease a cost         function comparing the known delineation and the output of the         network; a cross-entropy error function is used so as to allow         for multi-labeling (allowing for multiple waves at a given         instant); this minimization can be done though a gradient step     -   repeating steps 1 to 4 at least once for each cardiac signal of         the dataset;     -   recovering the neural network.

According to one embodiment, delineation further comprises wave characterization. According to said embodiment, p is the number of annotated types of wave plus the number of wave characterizations; for instance p=3+6=9 for identifying P waves, QRS complexes, and T waves, and characterizing premature waves, paced waves, ventricular QRS complexes, junctional QRS complexes, ectopic P waves and non-conducted P waves. According to said embodiment, annotations are expressed as lists of wave with their start and end points and characteristics such as for example: (P, 1.2 s, 1.3 s, [non-conducted]), (QRS 1.4 s 1.7 s, [premature, ventricular]), (T, 1.7, 2.1), (P, 2.2, 2.3); in this example, the first row of y, corresponding to P waves, will be 1 for samples corresponding to times between 1.2 and 1.3 s, and between 2.2 and 2.4 s, and 0 otherwise; row 2 will correspond to QRS complexes, row 3 to T waves, and row 4 corresponding to the premature characterization will be 1 during the premature QRS complex and 0 otherwise.

This invention also provides a method for manufacturing a neural network for the categorization of a cardiac signal, by training it.

In a multi-label classification, the manufacturing/training process includes the following steps:

-   -   taking one cardiac signal from a dataset containing cardiac         signals and their known labels; the cardiac signal must be         expressed as a matrix of size m×n with m fixed and at a         predefined frequency;     -   expressing the labels as a vector of size q, with q the number         of labels to identify; this vector could be [0; 1; 0; 0; 1; 0;         0; 0] for q=8; a 1 is set in the vector at the index         corresponding to the labels which are present (i.e. having a         score above at least one predefined threshold such has for         instance 0.5): in the above example, the cardiac signal exhibits         two labels;     -   computing the output of the network for this cardiac signal;     -   modifying the parameters of the network so as to decrease a cost         function comparing the known label vector and the output of the         network; a cross-entropy error function is used so as to allow         for multi-labeling (allowing for multiple labels for a cardiac         signal): this minimization can be done though a gradient step;     -   repeating steps 1 to 4 at least once for each cardiac signal of         the dataset;     -   recovering the neural network.

This invention also provides a method for manufacturing a neural network for both the delineation and the categorization of a cardiac signal, by training it.

In the embodiment of the combination of delineation with multi-label classification, the manufacturing process includes the following steps:

-   -   taking one cardiac signal from a dataset containing cardiac         signals and their known labels; the cardiac signal must be         expressed as a matrix of size m×n with m fixed and at a         predefined frequency;     -   expressing the labels as a vector of size q, with q the number         of labels to identify; this vector could be [0; 1; 0; 0; 1; 0;         0; 0] for q=8; a 1 is set in the vector at the index         corresponding to the labels which are present (i.e. above a         predefined threshold): in the above example, the cardiac signal         exhibits two labels;     -   expressing the delineation of this cardiac signal under the form         of a matrix Y of size p×n where p is the number of waves to         identify; typically p=3, so as to identify P waves, QRS waves,         and T waves; annotations are usually expressed as lists wave         type with their start and end points such as for example: (P,         1.2 s, 1.3 s), (QRS 1.4 s 1.7 s), (T, 1.7, 2.1), (P, 2.2, 2.3);         in this example, the first row of Y, corresponding to P waves,         will be 1 for samples corresponding to times between 1.2 and 1.3         s, and between 2.2 and 2.4 s, and 0 otherwise: row 2 will         correspond to QRS complexes and row 3 to T waves;     -   computing both outputs of the network for this cardiac signal;     -   modifying the parameters of the network so as to decrease the         sum of a cost function comparing the known label vector and one         of the output of the network, and a cost function comparing the         delineation and the other output; cross-entropy error functions         are used to allow for multi-labeling (allowing for multiple         labels for a cardiac signal as well as multiple waves at any         time point); this minimization can be done though a gradient         step;     -   repeating steps 1 to 4 at least once for each cardiac signal of         the dataset;     -   recovering the neural network.

According to one embodiment, the step of expressing the delineation of the cardiac signal under the form of a matrix Y of size p×n further comprises wave characterization. According to said embodiment, p is the number of annotated types of wave plus the number of wave characterizations; for instance p=3+6=9 for identifying P waves, QRS complexes, and T waves, and characterizing premature waves, paced waves, ventricular QRS complexes, junctional QRS complexes, ectopic P waves and non-conducted P waves. According to said embodiment, annotations are expressed as lists of wave with their start and end points and characteristics such as for example:

(P, 1.2 s, 1.3 s, [non-conducted]), (QRS 1.4 s 1.7 s, [premature, ventricular]), (T, 1.7, 2.1), (P, 2.2, 2.3); in this example, the first row of y, corresponding to P waves, will be 1 for samples corresponding to times between 1.2 and 1.3 s, and between 2.2 and 2.4 s, and 0 otherwise; row 2 will correspond to QRS complexes, row 3 to T waves, and row 4 corresponding to the premature characterization will be 1 during the premature QRS complex and 0 otherwise.

This invention also pertains to a method and a device for delineation of a cardiac signal, implementing a convolutional neural network, preferably a fully convolutional neural network, trained for delineation of a cardiac signal as described above.

As a basis, it shall be understood that the cardiac signal is expressed as a matrix X of size m×n at the frequency used for training the networks. The cardiac signal is used as input of the trained neural network.

The neural network then reads each time point of the cardiac signal, analyzes spatio-temporally each time point of the cardiac signal, assigns a temporal interval score to anyone of at least the following: P-wave, QRS complex. T-wave. It then recovers the output of the neural network, as a matrix Y of size p×n. An example is shown in FIG. 4: the first signal shows one of the leads of the ECG (to help the visualization), the following 3 signals are the outputs of the network, providing scores for P waves, QRS waves and T waves. As it can be seen, these scores are synchronized with the appearance of the aforementioned waves in the signal. According to one embodiment, when multiple leads cardiac signal is used, all the leads are processed simultaneously.

In a preferred embodiment, the neural network provides scores at each time point as a matrix Y. and a post-processing allows the allocation of each time point to none, single, or several waves, and provides the onset and offset of each of the identified waves as well as optionally its characterization. For instance, a sample can be affected to the waves for which the score on the corresponding row of Y is larger than 0.5. Wave characterization such as conductivity, prematurity and origin of the wave can be recovered from the activation of the corresponding row between the onset and the offset of the wave. The premature label can for instance be applied to the wave if the average of the row corresponding to the premature characterization is above 0.5 during the wave. This provides a delineation sequence of type (P, 1.2 s, 1.3 s, [non-conducted]), (QRS 1.4 s 1.7 s. [premature, ventricular]), (T, 1.7 s, 2.1 s). (P, 2.2 s, 2.3 s), as recorded in the annotations.

The invention also comprises a computer device implemented software comprising a trained neural network for delineation of a cardiac signal. The invention also comprises a device, such as for example a cloud server, a commercial ECG device, a mobile phone or a tablet, comprising a software implementing the method for delineation as described above.

According to one embodiment, the device further comprises a display configured for displaying the wave locations and optionally simultaneously the cardiac signal.

According to one embodiment, global measurements derived from the delineation sequence such as for instance the PR interval are displayed. According to one embodiment, global measurements derived from the delineation sequence are highlighted for values which are not in a normal range. According to one embodiment, local measurements such as for instance all RR intervals are displayed with the cardiac signal. According to one embodiment, the conduction pattern of the cardiac signal is displayed in order to easily visualize characterization such as for instance prematurity of the waves with the cardiac signal. In an embodiment, the waves are displayed according to time with the cardiac signal.

This invention also pertains to a method and a device for multi-label classification of a cardiac signal, implementing Long-term Recurrent Convolutional Networks (LRCN, (Donahue et al., arXiv:1411.4389v3, 17 Feb. 2015). These neural networks are trained for multi-label classification of a cardiac signal as described above.

As a basis, it shall be understood that the cardiac signal is expressed as a matrix of size m×n at the frequency used for training the networks. Then, the cardiac signal is used as input of the trained neural network.

The neural network then reads each time point of the cardiac signal, analyzes temporally each time point of the cardiac signal, computes a score for each label, recovers the output of the neural network. In an embodiment, the labels are non-exclusive.

In an embodiment, some other information can be included as inputs of the network. Said information can be delineation-derived such as for instance PR interval duration, heart rate, ST elevation or amplitudes of the QRS waves. It can also be patient-based such as their age or any relevant clinical information.

In an embodiment, the neural network NN2 reads and analyzes each time point of the cardiac signal and further the global measurements obtained from NN1.

In a preferred embodiment, the neural network recovers the output as a vector of size q. This vector contains scores for the presence of each label. According to one embodiment, a label is considered as present if its score is above a predefined threshold. This threshold is usually set to 0.5. It can however be modified to provide a different sensitivity-specificity couple. Indeed, increasing the threshold leads to lower specificity and higher specificity, and conversely when decreasing it. This set of couples is called a receiver operating characteristics curve and any point of this curve can be chosen through a modification of the threshold.

The invention also comprises a computer device implemented software comprising a trained neural network for multi-label classification of a cardiac signal. The invention also comprises a device, such as for example a cloud server, a commercial ECG device, a mobile phone or a tablet, comprising a software implementing the method of multi-label classification of a cardiac signal as described above.

According to one embodiment, the device further comprises a display configured for displaying the scores of the labels which have been allotted to a time window and optionally simultaneously the cardiac signal.

According to an embodiment, the list of found labels for which the score in the vector are higher than a predefined threshold, typically 0.5 is displayed. Labels can also be added depending on the delineation (delineation-based label), such as for instance the label corresponding to first degree atrioventricular block which is equivalent to a PR interval longer than 200 ms, said PR interval being a global measurement based on the delineation. The list of labels can finally be filtered to remove redundant labels based on a known hierarchy of labels (for instance only the most detailed labels are retained), or aggregated through time on long cardiac signal so as to recover the start and end times of each abnormality.

This invention also pertains to a method and a device for delineation and multi-label classification of a cardiac signal, implementing a neural network trained for delineation and multi-label classification of a cardiac signal as described above.

As a basis, it shall be understood that the cardiac signal is expressed as a matrix of size m×n at the frequency used for training the networks. Then, the cardiac signal is used as input of the trained neural network.

The neural network then reads each time point of the cardiac signal, analyzes temporally each time point, assigns a temporal score to all of the following at least: P-wave. QRS complex, T-wave. It then computes a score for each labels, recovers both the outputs of the neural network: the first as a matrix y of size p×n, providing scores for at least P waves, QRS waves and T waves; and the second as a vector of size q, said vector containing scores for the presence of each label.

In a preferred embodiment, a post-processing of the delineation output allows to affect each time point to none, single, or several waves, and provides the onset and offset of each of the identified waves. For instance, a sample can be affected to the waves for which the score on the corresponding row of Y is larger than 0.5. This provides a delineation sequence of type (P, 1.2 s, 1.3 s), (QRS 1.4 s 1.7 s), (T, 1.7 s, 2.1 s), (P, 2.2 s, 2.3 s), as recorded in the annotations.

According to an embodiment, the list of found labels for which the score in the vector are higher than a predefined threshold, typically 0.5, are displayed; as well as the delineation, optionally with the cardiac signal.

According to an embodiment of the invention, a step to prepare the signal and create input variables for classification is further carried out (“pre-treatment”). The purpose of this pre-treatment is to remove the disturbing elements of the signal such as for example noise and baseline, low frequency signal due to respiration and patient motion, in order to facilitate classification. For noise filtering, a multivariate approach functional analysis proposed by (Pigoli and Sangalli, Computational Statistics and Data Analysis, vol. 56, 2012, pp 1482-1498) can be used. The low frequencies of the signal corresponding to the patient's movements may be removed using median filtering as proposed by (Kaur et al., Proceedings published by International Journal of Computer Applications, 2011, pp 30-36).

According to an embodiment of the invention, a post-treatment step is added, so as to produce the onset and offset of each wave in the cardiac signal.

The invention also comprises a computer device implemented software comprising a trained neural network for delineation and multi-label classification of a cardiac signal.

The invention also comprises a device, such as for example a cloud server, a commercial ECG device, a mobile phone or a tablet, comprising a software implementing the method of delineation and multi-label classification of a cardiac signal as described above.

According to one embodiment, the device further comprises a display configured for displaying the wave locations, the scores of the labels which have been allotted to a time window and optionally simultaneously the cardiac signal.

In an embodiment, global and local measurements derived from the delineation sequence such as for instance the PR interval are displayed. In an embodiment, the global and local measurements derived from the delineation sequence are highlighted for values which are not in a normal range. In an embodiment, the conduction pattern of the cardiac signal is displayed in order to easily visualize characterization such as for instance prematurity of the waves; and the waves may be displayed according to time.

The present invention further relates to a system comprising an electrocardiograph for recording cardiac signal and for implementing the methods according to the present invention. Thus, the electrocardiograph provides labels, delineation, measurements and conduction pattern of the cardiac signal right after the recording.

This invention brings to the art a number of advantages, some of them being described below:

-   -   The input of the networks are one or multi-lead cardiac signals         with variable length, possibly preprocessed so as to remove         noise and baseline wandering due to patients movements, and         express the signal at a chosen frequency.     -   Using the presented lead invariant structure, a same network can         handle cardiac signals with different number of leads.     -   The output of a classification network is a vector of scores for         labels. These are not classification scores since one cardiac         signal can present several labels. For example, the output of         such network could be a vector [0.98; 0.89; 0.00; . . . ] with         the corresponding labels for each element of the vector (Right         Bundle Branch Bloc; Atrial Fibrillation; Normal ECG; . . . ).         Scores are given between a scale of [0, 1] and the above example         output vectors therefore indicates a right bundle branch block         and atrial fibrillations. A recurrent neural network         architecture can be added on the top of the convolutional         network (Donahue et al., arXiv:1411.4389v3, 17 Feb. 2015 and         Mnih et al., arXiv:1406.6247v1, 24 Jun. 2014). In this way, the         convolution network acts as a pattern detector whose output will         be accumulated in time by the recurrent network.     -   The output of the delineation network is a set of signals         spanning the length of the input cardiac signal, providing the         score for being in waves such as for instance P waves, QRS         complexes, a T waves and potentially other types of waves or         segments such as for example flutter waves. U waves or noisy         segments. An example of output signals is provided in FIG. 5.     -   The delineation network can also characterize the waves such as         for instance their prematurity, conductivity and ectopy. This         ability allows to unify two steps of the delineation which are         separate in current methods, making the proposed method more         reliable and able to leverage context information for the waves         characterization.     -   The delineation network is not limited to recovering at most one         wave at each time point and therefore can identify several waves         at any time point, such as for instance P waves hidden in a T         wave.     -   The delineation network allows both the recovery of the start         and end of each wave and there characterization in a single         step, which is more reliable than all previous methods. In         particular in is more reliable to recover P waves and         characterize them, allowing to provide the conductivity pattern         of the cardiac signal.     -   No works applying convolutional networks to the delineation have         been made so far.

The underlying structure of the networks is not fundamental as long as they are convolutional neural networks. One can use a structure such as RLCN (Donahue et al., arXiv:1411.4389v3, 17 Feb. 2015 and Mnih et al., arXiv:1406.6247v1, 24 Jun. 2014) for classification and a network similar as the one in (Long et al., Proceedings of Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, 2015, pp 3431-3440) for delineation. In both embodiments, convolutional layers must be modified as 1D convolutions instead of 2D convolutions. On top of these architectures, both embodiments can use a lead invariant structure such as but not limited to the one presented in FIG. 8.

A hybrid network, sharing the first layers and diverging so as to provide both the delineation as one output, and the multi-label classification as another output is also used. This combination has the advantage of being able to produce a multi-label classification helped by the identification of the cardiac signal waves.

EXAMPLES

The neural networks used within the present invention, were filed at LOGITAS under number D16201.

The present invention is further illustrated by the following examples.

Example 1: Training for Delineation

This training was performed on 2204 ECGs and the network evaluated on about 900 beats from 77 different patients which were not used for the training phase. The following table provides the precision of the wave onsets (beginnings) and offsets (ends) in term of bias and standard deviation (std) as well as the false positive (FP) and false negative (FN) rates of the waves detection and of their characterizations:

FP FN Bias Std (%) (%) (ms) (ms) Count P 7.9 5.6 0.9 10.6 730 PQ 0 0.3 0.3 7.2 616 QRS 0 0 1.8 5.2 887 QT 0 0.1 0.7 13.3 873 P onset N/A N/A −2.9 6.4 689 P offset N/A N/A −2 8.4 689 QRS onset N/A N/A −3.1 4 887 QRS offset N/A N/A −1.3 3.6 887 QT offset N/A N/A −2.3 12.3 872 ectopic P 6 16 N/A N/A 75 premature P 0 20 N/A N/A 10 paced P 0 24.3 N/A N/A 37 non-conducted P 0 8.3 N/A N/A 36 ventricular QRS 2.7 5.3 N/A N/A 38 premature QRS 8.3 15.4 N/A N/A 26 paced QRS 0 0 N/A N/A 22 junctional QRS 0 14.6 N/A N/A 48

Concerning hidden P waves, the proposed algorithm was able to recover 75 out of 87 hidden P waves present in this evaluation dataset, while other algorithms would not be able to find any of them.

From the onsets and offsets of each wave are derived standard global measurements such as the P duration, PR interval, QRS duration and QT interval. An evaluation was performed on the standard CSE dataset which provides acceptance limits for delineation algorithms (Christov et al. Biomedical Engineering OnLine, 2006, vol. 5, pp. 31-38), yielding the following results which are, well within the acceptance range:

Standard Deviation (ms) Bias (ms) Measurement Result Limit Result Limit P 3.8 15 −2.4 10 PQ 6.1 10 0.1 10 QRS 4.2 10 2.0 10 QT 7.2 30 −14.2 25

The following table sums up the results on the MIT-BIH Arrhythmia Database (Moody et al, Computers in Cardiology, 1990, vol. 17, pp. 185-188) of a delineation network with a lead-invariant structure, which was not used for the training, in terms of QRS and premature ventricular complexes (PVC) detections:

FP (%) FN (%) Count QRS 0.32 0.17 107341 PVC 7.68 15.10 7071

Compared with state-of-the-art algorithms, the precision was improved and the ability of the algorithm, which can find the waves and characterize them at the same time, is much more efficient. In FIG. 5 for instance, the ECG exhibits an atrioventricular block which means that the P waves and the QRS complexes are completely decoupled. In this example, the P waves are regular and QRS complexes happen at random times. One can observe in this example that the algorithm correctly found two P waves between the first QRS complex and the second QRS complex, while most algorithms would not be able to find them since they look for only one P wave before each complex. The last P wave also starts before the end of the last T wave, adding complexity. Finally, the algorithm is able to characterize theses waves as non-conducted. Other algorithms would not have been able to find the hidden waves and would not have been able to characterize any wave as non-conducted.

Example 2: Training for Multi-Label Classification

A network has been trained using about 85,000 ECCGs and has been evaluated on a dataset representative of a hospital emergency unit including 1,000 patients which were not used in the training phase. The results in terms of accuracy, specificity, sensitivity, and positive predict values were the following for some of the searched labels:

Popula- Accu- Sensi- Speci- tion racy tivity ficity PPV Normal ECG 42.1 77.39% 66.75% 89.06% 87.00% Atrial fibrilla- 22 99.75% 90.91% 100.00% 100.00% tion Atrial flutter 3 99.88% 66.67% 100.00% 100.00% Junctional 5 99.75% 80.00% 99.88% 80.00% rhythm Pacemaker 5 100.00% 100.00% 100.00% 100.00% Premature 17 99.63% 88.24% 99.87% 93.75% ventricular complex(es) Complete right 21 99.50% 90.48% 99.74% 90.48% bundle branch block Complete left 4 99.75% 75.00% 99.88% 75.00% bundle branch block Left ventricular 7 99.38% 57.14% 99.75% 66.67% hypertrophy Acute STEMI 5 100.00% 100.00% 100.00% 100.00% Old MI 27 93.79% 70.37% 94.60% 31.15%

A neural network with a lead-invariant structure aimed at classifying rhythm abnormalities was also trained. Its performance on Holter ECGs in term of atrial fibrillation was analyzed on the MIT-BIH Arrhythmia Database (Moody et al, Computers in Cardiology, 1990, vol. 17. pp. 185-188) comprising 30 minutes 2-lead ECGs of 48 different patients. To this end, the neural networks analyzed all 20 second segments of the ECG, which providing a rhythm label each 20 second, which were aggregated to provide the beginning and end of each rhythm abnormality or descriptor. The recovered labels were compared to the reference annotations, yielding a, accuracy, sensitivity, specificity and positive predictive value (PPV) for the atrial fibrillation label and the less specific atrial fibrillation or flutter label:

Accuracy Sensitivity Specificity PPV Atrial fibrillation 98.3% 96.9% 98.5% 89.6% Atrial fibrillation or flutter 99.0% 96.8% 99.2% 92.3%

These results are similar to the state-of-the-art in term of sensitivity, but significantly better than state-of-the-art methods in term of specificity and therefore also in accuracy and PPV.

A graphical representation of how a standard multi-label is used on ECGs is displayed in FIG. 6. The ECG is given as input to the network, which aggregates the information locally and then combines it layer by layer to produce a high-level multi-label classification of the ECG, in this example correctly recognizing atrial fibrillations and a right bundle branch block. Such networks however take a fixed size as input and the process must be reproduced at different locations so as to analyze the whole signal. FIG. 7 is an example of a graphic representation of a recurrent neural network which overcomes this issue. This type of network is made from a standard convolutional network computed at all possible locations of the signal, and on top of which comes another network layer which accumulates the information. In this example, the network correctly recognizes a premature ventricular complex (PVC, the fifth and largest beat) in the first part of the signal while the second part of the signal is considered as normal. The accumulated output is therefore PVC since this ECG has an abnormality and cannot therefore be considered as normal.

Example 3: Delineation and Multi-Label Classification

In another embodiment, the applicant combines features described above in examples 1 and 2. Such combination enables to combine the advantages of both networks in a unique network, providing similar results for both the delineations and the multi-label classifications.

Example 4: Platform Use Case

According to one embodiment, a user can log into a web platform. An upload button is available for the user to upload one of their ECGs in a supported formal so as to process it. The user is then redirected to a page displaying the ECG as shown in FIG. 9. The user can than select to show the detected abnormalities as shown in FIG. 10. In this case, the neural networks correctly detected a second degree atrioventricular block Mobitz I (a lengthening of the PR interval leading to a non-conducted P wave) and an intraventricular block (causing a lengthened QRS duration). The user can also choose to display the delineation information as shown in FIG. 11. This information includes highlighting of the identified waves on the ECG drawing, printing global measurements derived from the delineation above the ECG drawing such as for example heart rate (HR) and QRS duration (QRS), with highlighting of the values which are not in a normal range such as for instance a QRS duration larger than 110 ms. Local measurements such as all RR intervals are also shown as figures under the ECG. It also includes a laddergram-like feature showing the conduction pattern of the waves, their prematurity and their origin. This feature is displayed under the ECG, with each dot on the first line being a P wave, each dot of the second wave being a QRS wave and lines between them implying conduction. One can observe in this case that some P waves are not conducted. These same P waves are hidden P waves since they occur during T waves. In FIGS. 12 and 13, one can see different examples of the conduction pattern display where the prematurity of the P and QRS waves are shown (with surrounding squares), and the origin of the waves are also shown (lightning bolt for a paced wave, square for ectopic P wave or ventricular QRS complex, triangle for junctional QRS complex etc).

Example 5: Application Programming Interface (API) Use Case

According to an embodiment, a user can also send an ECG through an API. The ECG is received on the platform and analyzed. The user can then recover information such as the delineation and the multi-label classification through another API.

Example 6: Resting ECG Interpretation

A patient arrives at the emergency unit of a hospital and an ECG is performed. The ECG shows wide complex tachycardia. Such a pattern can occur in very different situations, such as in the case of ventricular tachycardia, or with both atrial fibrillation and Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome, or with both a bundle branch block and sinus tachycardia. Such conditions must be treated differently, the two former being life-threatening. Standard algorithms of the prior art can only detect one abnormality at a time and not a combination of labels. In this case, it is however crucial to be able to perform multi-label classification since interpretations may imply a combinations of labels. Being able to do so help properly identifying an actual ventricular tachycardia that other algorithms have difficulty to identify such as the one in FIG. 14 Indeed, method according to the present invention is able to test all other possible combinations of labels and rule them out.

Also, during an examination a general practitioner performs an ECG on a patient. The delineation is then helpful in order to highlight hidden P waves which may completely change the diagnostic between normal sinus rhythm and a 2^(nd) degree atrioventricular block which may require the use of a pacemaker.

Example 7: Holter Interpretation

A patient is prescribed a 7 day Holter. The 7 days must afterwards be interpreted by a specialist. The proposed algorithm is able to identify noisy segments of the signal which are common in Holters since the patient is allowed to move. It can also find atrial fibrillation or atrial flutter which is often looked at in Holters. Thanks to its multi-label ability, the proposed algorithm can also find atrial fibrillation during noise segments. In other situations, the patient could be monitored at a hospital in order to assess the possibility of an acute myocardial infarction. The proposed method can then provide ST elevations through time thanks to the delineation (amplitude at the QRS offset minus amplitude at the QRS onset) which changes are a very important indicator of STEMI (ST elevation myocardial infarction).

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a photo of an ECG.

FIG. 2 is a schematic representation of a normal ECG, with the P wave, the QRS complex/wave comprising the Q, R, S and J points, and the T wave.

FIG. 3 is an example of structure for a basic neural network with no convolutional layer.

FIG. 4 is an example of the output of the delineation network on a normal ECG.

FIG. 5 is an example of the output of the delineation network on an ECG with hidden P waves (high degree atrioventricular block).

FIG. 6 models the way a standard multi-label convolutional network works.

FIG. 7 models the way a multi-label recurrent convolutional network works.

FIG. 8 provides an example of structure to use as first layers of a neural network to make it able to process any number of leads.

FIG. 9 shows the interface after loading an ECG.

FIG. 10 shows the interface with the ECG and the labels provided by the multi-label classification algorithm.

FIG. 11 shows the interface with the ECG, the labels provided by the multi-label classification algorithm, the delineation of the waves on the ECG, measurements derived from the delineation above the ECG with highlighted abnormal values, and conduction pattern under the ECG derived from the delineation. Some waves, including one hidden P wave are more specifically shown.

FIG. 12 shows an example ECG with its conduction pattern comprising premature atrial complexes and one paced P waves. This conduction pattern is composed of a first line with the P waves as dots, and a second line with the QRS as dots. It can be synchronized or not with the signal depending on its use (not synchronized on this example).

FIG. 13 shows an example ECG with its conduction pattern comprising non-conducted P waves, paced QRS complexes and premature ventricular complexes. These elements are pointed at on the figure.

FIG. 14 shows an ECG with a ventricular tachycardia which was not identified by a prior art algorithm but is correctly identified by the proposed algorithm. 

What is claimed:
 1. A system for analyzing an electrocardiogram (ECG) signal corresponding to a patient, the system comprising at least one server and at least one processor configured to execute instructions to: receive the ECG signal sampled from the patient over a plurality of time points; determine delineation scores at each time point of the plurality of time points of at least a portion of the ECG signal, the delineation scores corresponding to multiple wave types at each time point; determine a presence of a first wave type and a second wave type based on the at least a portion of an ECG signal and the delineation scores; determine conduction information between the first wave type and the second wave type; and generate information for display comprising a graphical representation of the at least a portion of the ECG signal and the conduction information between the first wave type and the second wave type.
 2. The system of claim 1, wherein the conduction information indicates conduction between the first wave type and the second wave type.
 3. The system of claim 1, wherein the conduction information indicates non-conduction between the first wave type and the second wave type.
 4. The system of claim 1, wherein the first wave type is a P wave and the second wave type is a QRS wave.
 5. The system of claim 1, wherein the at least one processor is further configured to execute instructions to generate information for display showing the first wave type as a first dot and the second wave type as a second dot.
 6. The system of claim 5, wherein the conduction information comprises a line between the first dot and the second dot indicating conduction between the first wave type and the second wave type.
 7. The system of claim 1, wherein the at least one processor is further configured to execute instructions to: determine characterization information for the first wave type or the second wave type or both; and generate information for display comprising the characterization information.
 8. The system of claim 7, wherein the characterization information comprises a characterization of premature waves.
 9. The system of claim 8, wherein the characterization information comprises a square associated with the premature wave for display.
 10. The system of claim 1, wherein the at least one processor is further configured to execute instructions to: determine a presence of additional first and second wave types at additional time points and additional conduction information relating thereto; and generate information for a conduction pattern display comprising the additional conduction information between the additional first and second wave types.
 11. The system of claim 1, wherein the visual indication of the conduction information is aligned with a location of the conduction information on the graphical representation of the at least a portion of the ECG signal.
 12. The system of claim 1, wherein the at least one processor is further configured to execute instructions to: determine a presence of one or more anomalies in the ECG signal; and generate information for display indicating the presence of the one or more anomalies in the ECG signal.
 13. The system of claim 1, wherein the at least one processor is configured to execute instructions to determine the delineation scores by applying the at least a portion of the ECG signal to a first neural network.
 14. The system of claim 13, wherein the at least one processor is configured to execute instructions to determine anomaly information about the ECG signal via a second neural network.
 15. A computerized method for analyzing an electrocardiogram (ECG) signal corresponding to a patient, the computerized method comprising: receiving the ECG signal sampled from the patient over a plurality of time points; determining delineation scores at each time point of the plurality of time points of at least a portion of the ECG signal, the delineation scores corresponding to multiple wave types at each time point; determining a presence of a first wave type and a second wave type based on the at least a portion of an ECG signal and the delineation scores; determining conduction information between the first wave type and the second wave type; and generating information for display comprising a graphical representation of the at least a portion of the ECG signal and the conduction information between the first wave type and the second wave type.
 16. The computerized method of claim 15, wherein the conduction information indicates conduction between the first wave type and the second wave type.
 17. The computerized method of claim 15, wherein the conduction information indicates non-conduction between the first wave type and the second wave type.
 18. The computerized method of claim 15, wherein the first wave type is a P wave and the second wave type is a QRS wave.
 19. The computerized method of claim 15, further comprising generating information for display showing the first wave type as a first dot and the second wave type as a second dot.
 20. The computerized method of claim 19, wherein the conduction information comprises a line between the first dot and the second dot indicating conduction between the first wave type and the second wave type.
 21. The computerized method of claim 15, further comprising: determining a presence of additional first and second wave types at additional time points and additional conduction information relating thereto; and generating information for a conduction pattern display comprising the additional conduction information between the additional first and second wave types.
 22. The computerized method of claim 15, wherein the visual indication of the conduction information is aligned with a location of the conduction information on the graphical representation of the at least a portion of the ECG signal.
 23. The computerized method of claim 15, further comprising: determining a presence of one or more anomalies in the ECG signal; and generating information for display indicating the presence of the one or more anomalies in the ECG signal.
 24. The computerized method of claim 15, wherein determining the delineation scores comprises applying the at least a portion of the ECG signal to a first neural network.
 25. The computerized method of claim 24, further comprising determining anomaly information about the ECG signal via a second neural network.
 26. A programmed routine for use with a computerized system for analyzing an electrocardiogram (ECG) signal obtained from a patient, the programmed routine comprising instructions that when executed: receive the ECG signal sampled from the patient over a plurality of time points; determine delineation scores at each time point of the plurality of time points of at least a portion of the ECG signal, the delineation scores corresponding to multiple wave types at each time point; determine a presence of a first wave type and a second wave type based on the at least a portion of an ECG signal and the delineation scores; determine conduction information between the first wave type and the second wave type; and generate information for display comprising a graphical representation of the at least a portion of the ECG signal and the conduction information between the first wave type and the second wave type. 